Question
The Terry Schiavo case http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/03/25/schiavo.qa/
(L
Question
The Terry Schiavo case http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/03/25/schiavo.qa/
(Links to an external site).
riveted the nation during the first half of 2005. This case centered on
her husband Michael’s decision to remove her feeding tube, and her
parent’s fight to keep her alive. One side of the argument suggests that
Terry possessed a fundamental right to die https://time.com/3763521/terri-schiavo-right-to-die-brittany-maynard/
(Links to an external site)., while the other suggests she had a fundamental right to be given food and water.
Both arguments find support in the concept of substantive due
process. The former would point to the concept that there is a
fundamental right to privacy under the 5thand 14thAmendments, while the latter would argue that the 5thand 14thamendments guarantee citizens will not be denied life without due process of law.
Assume that a case similar to the Schiavo one reaches the U.S.
Supreme Court and you are a justice. How would you rule if both parties
argued that their side was supported by the concept of substantive due
process? Does one side hold more legal weight than the other? Why or why
not? If you find that substantive due process is not implicated in this
case, how would you rule? Why?
Instructions
Respond to the above prompt with a thoughtful essay of about 1,000 words. Cite your sources appropriately, taking care to give credit where credit is due. Please use Chicago style
Links to an external site.;
you’re free to choose between the notes system (in which case you do
not need a separate bibliography) or the author-date system (in which
case you’ll use in-text citations and a bibliography is required).
Submission
Submit your response by uploading a document from your computer (PDF or Microsoft Word).